Folks, I hope to be back to semi-regular blogging by next week, but in the meantime I had to share this announcement. Our newest course (number eight) at LibertyClassroom.com is now ready for viewing at your convenience: “John Maynard Keynes: His System and Its Fallacies.”
Here’s what the course looks like:
- A Few Fundamental Economic Concepts
- The Production Structure and the Order of Goods
- The Calculation of GDP: The Income Method (Part 1)
- The Calculation of GDP: The Income Method (Part 2)
- The Calculation of GDP: The Expenditure and Output Methods
- Inventories and the Measurement of GDP
- The Conceptual Foundations of GDP Measurement
- The Calculation of GDP with Durable Capital Goods
- Depreciation and GDP
- Nominal and Real GDP
- The Circular Flow of Income and Expenditure: An Introduction
- The Circular Flow with Durable Capital Goods
- The Circular Flow with Inventories
- Equilibrium and Disequilibrium Levels of GDP: An Introduction
- Equilibrium and Disequilibrium Levels of GDP: Further Explorations
- Price Rigidity, Price Flexibility and Equilibrium GDP
- Keynes’ Theory of Consumption Expenditure: The Fundamental Principles
- Keynes’ Theory of Consumption Expenditure: Implications for Equilibrium GDP
- Consumption Expenditure and Equilibrium GDP with Durable Capital Goods
- The Determinants of Investment Expenditure (Part 1)
- The Determinants of Investment Expenditure (Part 2)
- Aggregate Investment Expenditure and the Rate of Interest
- Expectations and Investment Expenditure
- The Demand for Money: An Introduction
- The Speculative Demand for Money
- Interest Rate Determination and the Level of Employment
- Unemployment in the Keynesian System
- The Keynesian Multiplier and Monetary and Fiscal Stimulus
- Consumption Expenditure and Savings in the Keynesian System
- The Role of Time in Production and the Maintenance of Capital: The Austrian Perspective
- The Keynesian Denigration of Savings: A Critique (Part 1)
- The Keynesian Denigration of Savings: A Critique (Part 2)
Also, tonight is our monthly live session, in which a few of our faculty answer questions live for 90 minutes. This month I’ll be joined by our economics professors: Jeffrey Herbener and G.P. Manish (who teaches the course on Keynes). Here’s how to watch.
If you haven’t yet joined us, now’s a great time. Learn the history and economics they didn’t teach you, from professors you can trust, while driving your car. Plus, ask questions in our forums! Here’s more.